Cambridge

Showing 18 attractions
9
4 reviews
This is one of Britain's finest museums... the permanent collections contain remarkable antiquities. — Frommer's
9
4 reviews
The awe-inspiring American Air Museum hangar pays homage to US WWII servicemen, hosting the largest collection of American civil and military aircraft outside the USA. — Lonely Planet
8
2 reviews
Based on Sainte-Chapelle, the 13th-century royal chapel in Paris, this house of worship is perhaps the most glorious flowering of Perpendicular Gothic in Britain. — Fodor's
8
4 reviews
At the Scott Polar Research Institute, you can pore over exhibits relating to the Arctic and Antarctic, including Sir Ernest Shackleton's expedition diaries from 1902 to 1922. — Travel + Leisure
8
2 reviews
Founded in 1441 by Henry VI, King's College has a magnificent late-15th-century chapel that is its most famous landmark. — Fodor's
8
2 reviews
If you walk through to the riverbank, you can stroll along the Backs and photograph the elegant bridge. — Fodor's
8
2 reviews
Trinity was founded in 1546 by Henry VIII whose statue stands over the Great Gate. It is the largest Cambridge college. — Michelin Guide
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2 reviews
The only surviving buildings of the Dominican Priory are the Hall and Old Library, with Tudor façades, forming the south and east sides of New Court. — Michelin Guide
7
3 reviews
Founded in 1352, Corpus Christi is the second smallest college in Cambridge but nonetheless the most interesting from a historical standpoint. — Michelin Guide
7
2 reviews
The rebuilding of the university church began in 1478 in late Perpendicular Gothic and was not completed until 1608 when Robert Grumbold's grandfather, also called Robert, added the tower with an extremely fine view. — Michelin Guide
7
2 reviews
Founded in 1496, Jesus was a former Benedictine convent, built around the Cloister and 12C Priory Chapel. — Michelin Guide
7
2 reviews
Confusingly pronounced "maud-lin," Magdalene College was a lodging for Benedictine monks for more than 100 years before the college was founded in 1542. — Fodor's
7
2 reviews
The first building completed by Wren and the first Classical edifice in Cambridge (1663-1666), the chapel of Pembroke College was commissioned by Matthew Wren, Bishop of Ely. — Michelin Guide
7
2 reviews
A complicated contraption for telling time by the moon.  — Atlas Obscura
7
2 reviews
Not one of the university's standout buildings, Trinity Hall does have one of its most quintessential viewpoints. — Fodor's
7
2 reviews
A treasure trove of astronomical, mathematical, and scientific instruments at Cambridge University.  — Atlas Obscura
7
2 reviews
The flimsy-looking wooden construction joining the two halves of Queens' College was first built in 1749. — Lonely Planet
7
2 reviews
Numberless clock creates a meal of time for the dreaded, insectile Chronophage.  — Atlas Obscura
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